Very little is known about this title which seems to be a one-shot pulp
launched by H.C. Blackerby who also launched another one-shot detective
pulp, Gem Detective, and a one-shot western pulp called Prize
Western at the same time. The title was later
used by Frank Communale for a true crime magazine in the 1950s.

Very little is known about this title which seems to be a one-shot pulp published
by the Canadian publisher Norman Book Company reprinting stories from their other
magazines such as Daredevil Detective Stories and World-Wide Detective Stories.
No date is shown in the magazine but it was probably published in 1942 or 1943.

Although typical of the period, Complete Underworld Novelettes featured some of the
better-known authors such as W.T. Ballard and Ace Williams. Billed initially as a quarterly,
and latterly as bi-monthly, it rarely maintained such a schedule.

Despite the subtitle, the magazine provided a standard fare of murder and
detective mystery short stories, all new, by prominent mystery authors.
However, the debut issue failed to find favour, and the title was discontinued.

The Craig Rice Mystery Digest contained four abridged novels and, although in digest form was really
an anthology issued as #12 in the 'Bonded Collection'. In effect, it served as a trial balloon for
Craig Rice Crime Digest which was to be launched later that year.

One of the many undated "one shot" magazines published in the UK in the
years after the Second World War. In a loose series with Homicide
Reporter, Police Detective, Racket-Buster Detective
and Crime Investigator.

One of the many undated "one shot" magazines published in the UK in the
years after the Second World War. In a loose series with Crime
Detective, Homicide Reporter, Police Detective and
Racket-Buster Detective.

An early horror-oriented crime pulp magazine with a decided macabre slant,
Crime Mysteries started as a weekly, but dropped back to a monthly schedule
after only six issues and folded two issues later.